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LiBfiASY oT" OONiEhESS]! 
J wo Oopios HecBivGJ 

DEC 2 1907 

I COPY B. 



Copyrighted November, 1907, 

by 

Mrs. Hubert Childe 



Desiarned and Printed by 
The Armstrong Printing Co. 
Wichita, Kansas 




Poetry comes nearer the vital truth than history. 

— Plato 



In launching this little book upon the 
sea of public opinion, 1 wish to say that 
its contents have taken years in the 
gathering and have been collected from 
various sources. Some of the selections 
are by authors unknown to me, while 
others are familiar to everyone. As the 
years passed by, the reading of this 
collection at odd times has afforded 
many an enjoyable moment to me, and 
that it may do the tame for you, my 
reader, is the sincere wish of the compiler, 

MRS. HUBERT CHILDE 
Wichita. Kansas 



Life and Song Seven 



UFE AND SONG 



I. 

If life were caught by a clarionet, 

And a wild heart throbbing in the reed 
Should thrill its joy and trill its fret, 
And utter its heart in every deed, 

II. 

Then would this breathing clarionet 
Type what the poet fcdn would be ; 

For none o* the singers ever yet 
Has wholly lived his minstrelsy ; 

111. 

Or clearly sung his true, true thought; 

Or utterly bodied forth his life. 
Or out of life and song has wrought 

The perfect one of man and wife ; 

IV. 

Or lived and sung, that Life and Song 
Might each express the other's all. 

Careless if life or art were long. 

Since both were one to stand or fall : 

V. 

So that the wonder struck the crowd. 
Who shouted it about the land : 

His song was only living aloud. 
His work, a singing with his hand I 

— Sidney Lanier 



Eight Life and Song 



ONCE IN A WHILE 



Once in a while the »un shines out, 

And the arching skies are a perfect blue ; 

Once in a while, 'mid clouds of doubt, 

Hope's brightest stars come peeping through. 

Cur paths lead down by the meadows fair. 
Where the sweetest blossoms nod and smile. 

And we lay aside our cross of care 
Once in a while. 



Once in a w^hile within our own 

We clasp the hand of a steadfast friend; 

Once in a while we hear a tone 

Of love with the heart's ow^n voice to blend 

And the dearest of all our dreams come true. 
And on life's way is a golden mile. 

Each thirsting flower is kissed with dew 
Once in a while. 



Once in a while in the desert sand 

We find a spot of the fairest green; 
Once in a while from where we stand 

The hills of paradise are seen; 
And a perfect joy in our hearts we hold, 

A joy that the w^orld cannot defile; 
We trade earth's dross for the purest gold 
Once in a while. 

— Nixon Waterman 



And well we know that since the world began 
The heart was master in the world of man. 

-T. W. Parens 



GOOD-BYE 




MUSIC 

Full many souls there are whom harmony 

Of interwoven sounds fills with a peace 

So comforting that, though the music cease. 

Its blessing lingers in the memory 

Like a dear hand's caress. But 1 in vain 

Seek here for rest; for always in the song 

Are whispers of a language sweet and strong. 

Half-heard, elusive, and 1 know the pain 

Of one who can but understand in part, 

Who sleeps, and, hearing voices, knows he dreams. 

Yet cannot wake, until at times it seems 

Some sudden chord may well-nigh break my heart. 

And is this all ? Or will Death's gentle hand. 

Laid on mine ears, help me to understand ? 

— Averic Standish Francis 



CONTENT 

If I should miss thee when the twilight came. 
And, holding forth my hand, no pressure kind 
Should meet my own, 1 still should know thou wert 
Not far away, for love's own sense divines 
The close companionship of souls that meet. 
With some it matters not what space divides. 
What oceans roll between. 

The meeting still 
May be close, real, and every way complete. 
So if I see thee not, I know thou art 
Still with me, love, and, reaching forth my hand. 
1 grasp thine own, and then 1 am content. 

— Helen N. Packard 



Give me that man 
That is not passion's slave, and I will wear him 
In my heart's core, ay, in my heart of heart. 

— Shakespeare 



Ten Life and Song 



THE SOUL'S SOLITUDE 

There is a mystery in human hearts, 
And though we are encircled by a host 
Of those who love us well and are beloved - 
To every one of us, from time to time, 
There comes a sense of utter loneliness. 

Our dearest friend is stranger to our joy. 
And can not realize our bitterness. 
'There is not one who really understands — 
Not one to enter into all I feel;" 
Such is the cry of each of us in turn. 

We w^ander in a solitary w^ay. 
No matter what or w^here our lot may be; 
Each heart, mysterious even to itself, 
Must live its inner life in solitude. 



THE CORONATION 



Red leaves are fluttering down the forest ways; 

And silence deep is brooding over all. 

Save when, at times, some lonely wood-bird's call 

Comes fraught with memories of vanished days. 

Along the lane the sumac torches blaze; 

From orchards ripe the sumac torches fall; 

And eastward, far away, a mountain tall, 

Looms through the blue, its summit capped in haze. 

I know not why, but autumn's golden prime. 

When corn-lands brow^n are set with stacks of sheaves. 

And beach burrs spill their nuts upon the ground. 

Seems, evermore, that sweet fulfillment time 

When Nature's kindly hand a chaplet weaves 

Wherewith, at last, the waning Year is crowned. 

— Eugene C. Dolson 



i 



cres. _ . _ _ _ 

Lines of white in a sul - len sea. 

"THIS. TOO. WILL PASS AWAY" 

We long for something in our selfish pride, 
Perhaps a bauble that may glitter bright. 
Some foolish thing we think is good and right 

For us to have ; and though God may decide 

That it is best that we should be denied. 

We murmur at His will; our sin-blind sight. 
Impatient, cannot see it in His light. 

And so we spend our lives unsatisfied. 

In every Hfe there must be light and shade. 

And joy and sorrow. A jewel in the dark 
Will shine as in the sun, a quenchless spark. 

Emblem of hope whose light shall never fade. 

O heart, be strong! though it may storm today. 
Be patient, and "this, too, will pass away!" 

— Henry Coyle 



Today 

Well lived — makes every yesterday 

A dream of happiness. 

And every tomorrow a vision of hope. 



UNWRITTEN MUSIC 

There is unwritten music. The world is full of it. 
I hear it every hour that I w^ake ; and my waking sense is 
surpassed sometimes by my sleeping, though that is a 
mystery. There is no sound of simple nature that is not 
music. It is all God's work, and so harmony. You may 
mingle, and divide, and strengthen the passages of its 
great anthem; and it is still melody, — melody. 

-N. P. Willi. 



Twelve Life and Song 



1 CANNOT TELL 

I cannot tell — 

If all these fever'd longings 
For something that to-day's walks do not hold, 

Would be stilled in having them, or weary 
When the tinsel 'gins to show beneath the gold. 

Or mayhaps when our mind's scope may be wider 
Our noblest thoughts these yearnings will dispel — 

And read a brighter message in the stars, 

— 1 cannot tell. 

I cannot tell — 

Yet if beyond life's shadows 

Some sweet hope may lie; 
Or if the eyes we love will beam the brighter 

When the tears they w^eep for us be dry ; 
Or when this day has died away in shadows 

And naught in all our future does seem well; 
Will tell our hearts, "Ah, yesterday was fair!" 

— 1 cannot tell. 

I cannot tell — 

If the sweet wild roses 
That fling their fragrance 'round my path today, 

Would be as sweet if some one did not love me. 
And turned the offerings of my heart aw^ay. 

Or, if some one whispered her more softly. 
And broke the magic of my love's sweet spell. 

My heart would turn in scorn or break in anguish, 

— 1 cannot tell. 

-G. W. Ogden 



Know well, my son, God's hand controls 
Whate'er thou fearest ; 
'Round him in calmest music rolls 
Whate'er thou hearest. 

-Whittier 



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Shad - OW8 riB - ing on you 



And music, too, dear music ! that can touch 
Beyond all else the soul that loves it much, 

Now heard far off, so far as but to seem 
Like the faint, exquisite music of a dream. 

— Thomas Moore 



FRIENDS OF MY CHILDHOOD 

"Where are they — the friends of my childhood enchanted ? 

The clear, laughing eyes looking back in my ow^n; 
And the warm, chubby fingers my palms have so wanted. 
As when we raced over pink pastures of clover 

And mocked the quail's whirr and the bumble-bee's 
drone ? 

Have the breezes of time blown their blossoming faces 

Forever adrift down the years that have flown ? 
Am I never to see them romp back to their places. 
Where over the meadow, in sunshine and shadow. 
The meadow-larks trill and the bumble-bees drone ? 

Where are they? Ah! dim in the dust lies the clover; 

The whippoorwill's call has a sorrowful tone. 
And the dove's — I have wept at it over and over — 
I want the glad lustre of youth and the cluster 

Of faces asleep w^here the bumble-bees drone. 



Long, long be my heart w^ith such memories fill'd ! 
Like the vase, in which roses have once been distill'd : 
You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will. 
But the scent of the roses will hang round it still. 

— Thomas Moore 



Fourteen Life and Song 



A TURNED-DOWN PAGE 

There's a turned-down page, as some writer says. 

In every human life — 
A hidden story of happier days — 

Of peace amid the strife. 

A folded leaf that the world knows not — 

A love dream rudely crushed ; 
The sight of a face that is not forgot, 

Although the voice be hushed. 

The far-distant sounds of a harp's soft strings. 

An echo on the air; 
The hidden page may be full of such things. 

Of things that once were fair. 

There's a hidden page in each life, and mine 

A story might unfold; 
But the end was sad of the dream divine — 

it better rests untold. 

—J. E. Bennett 



I THINK OF THEE 

I think of thee ! and suddenly the cloud 
That has enwrapt my spirit like a shroud 
Is all dispelled and vanished from sight. 
As darkness flees before the daw^ning light. 
I think of thee! 

Like blossoms drooping in the summer rain. 
That, when the storm is o'er, refreshed, again 
Lift their sweet faces to the sun's warm rays. 
My hopes revive ; I dream of brighter days. 
I think of thee I 

Though crushed by sorrow and oppressed by fate. 
Thy presence makes my heart less desolate. 
Oh, dearest love I Be thine the gentle power 
To comfort me; for in my darkest hour 
I think of theel 

— Martha A. Kidder 



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Shad - ows ris - ing on you and 



MUSIC 

How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank I 

Here will we sit, and let the sound of music 

Creep in our ears; soft stillness and the night 

Become the touches of sweet harmony. 

Sit, Jessica; look how the floor of heaven 

Is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold; 

There's not the smallest orb which thou behold'st. 

But in his motion like an angel sings, 

Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubims; 

Such harmony is in immortal souls; 

But w^hilst this muddy vesture of decay 

Doth grossly close it in, we cannot hear it. — 

Come, ho, and wake Diana with a hymn: 

With sweetest touches pierce your mistress* ear. 

And draw her home with music. 

Jes. I'm never merry when I hear sweet music. 

Lor. The reason is, your spirits are attentive ; 
For do but note a wild and wanton herd, 
Or race of youthful and unhandled colts, 
Fetching mad bounds, bellowing and neighing loud — 
Which is the hot condition of their blood — 
If they perchance but hear a trumpet sound, 
Or any air of music touch their ears. 
You shall perceive them make a mutual stand ; 
Their savage eyes turned to a modest geize. 
By the sweet power of music. Therefore the poet 
Did feign that Orpheus drew trees, stones, and floods; 
Since nought so stockish, hard, and full of rage. 
But music for the time doth change his nature. 
The man that hath no music in himself, 
Nor is not moved w^ith concord of sweet sounds. 
Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils ; 
The motions of his spirit are dull as night, 
And his affections dark as Erebus: 
Let no such man be trusted. 

— Merchant of Venice 



Sicteen l-j^e and Song 



I SHALL FIND REST 

A little further on - 
There will be time — I shall find rest anon : 
Thus do we say, while eager youth invites 
Young hope to try her w^ings in wanton flights, 
And nimble fancy builds the soul a nest 

On some far crag ; but soon youth's flame is gone — 
Burned lightly out, while we repeat the jest 
With smiling confidence, — I shall find rest 
A little further on. 

A little further on 

I shall find rest; half-fiercely we avow 
When noon beats on the dusty field and care 
Threats to unjoin our armor, and the glare 
Throbs with the pulse of battle, v/hile life's best 

Flies with the flitting stars : the frenzied brow 
Pains for the laurel more than for the breast 

Where Love soft-nestling waits. Not now, not now. 
With feverish breath we cry, I shall find rest 
A little further on. 

A little further on 
I shall find rest: half-sad, at last, we say. 
When sorrow's settling cloud blurs out the gleam 
Of glory's torch, and to a vanished dream 

Love's palace hath been turned, then — all depressed. 
Despairing, sick at heart — we may not stay 
Our weary feet, so lonely then doth seem 

This shadow-haunted world. We, so unblest. 
Weep not to see the grave which waits its guest. 
And feel around our feet the cool, sweet clay : 
We speak the fading world farewell and say: 
Not on this side — alas I — I shall find rest 
A little further on. 



Make life a ministry of love» and it will always 

be worth living. 

— Browninc 



The Swal - lows are mak - ing them read - y to fly, 



PASSION IN TATTERS 

This exquisite little bit of poetry was written by a grray- 
haired patient in the Longview Insane Asylum.] 

What is love, that all the world 

Talks so much about it? 
What is love, that neither you 

Nor I can do without it? 

Love's a tyrant and a slave, 
A torment and a treasure; 

Having it we know no peace. 
Lacking it, no pleasure. 

Would we shun it if we could ? 

Sooth, I almost doubt it. 
Faith, I'd rather bear its pain. 

Than live my life without it. 



THE MUSIC OF SILENCE 

When you leave the city and flee away. 

To rest in some country solitude. 
It is not to hear the low brook play. 

Or the wood-bird's musical interlude. 
It is not to hear the fantastic strains 

Of the symphony played by the wind on the trees, 
The hum of insects, the patter of rains. 

For there is a music more soft than these. 

Go, stand on the crest of a lonely hill 

When the landscape lies in a sunset hush; 
When man is absent, and nature still. 

And the west is bathed in a tender Hush; 
Let the notes of silence arise and meet. 

And fill your soul with their ecstacy. 
With a silent music, soft and sweet. 

With a grand and moving melody. 

— Harry Romaine 



Eighteen Life and Song 



TWILIGHT 

I love thee, Twilight I as thy shadows roll, 
The calm of evening steals upon my soul. 
Sublimely tender, solemnly serene. 
Still as the hour, enchanting as the scene. 
I love thee, Twilight ! for thy gleams impart 
Their dear, their dying influence to my heart. 
When o'er the harp of thought thy passing wind 
Awakens all the music of the mind. 
And joy and sorrow, as the spirit burns. 
And hope and memory sweep the chords by turns 
While contemplation on seraphic wings, 
Mounts with the flame of sacrifice, and sings, — 
Twilight ! I love thee ; let thy glooms increase, 
Till every feeling, every pulse, is peace. 
Slow from the sky the light of day declines, 
Clearer within, the dawn of glory shines. 
Revealing, in the hour of nature's rest, 
A world of wonders in the poet's breast ; 
Deeper, O Twilight ! then thy shadows roll, 
An awful vision opens on my soul. 

— James Montgomery 



ON THE BATTLEFIELD 

The sun rose over a field of wheat. 

And warmed the breath of an early spring; 

The smiling flowers made the morning sweet. 
And there were caroling birds to sing; 

And by the brook were children at play. 

Planning their childish games for the day. 

But the sun sank over a field of red. 

Leaving no w^heat nor a farmhouse there, 

Only the ghastly lines of the dead. 

And blackness and ruin everywhere; 

And along the brook, instead of play. 

Were the silent forms of blue and gray. 
— F. H. Sweet 



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• ^ hi J N ^ 1 I =Pt^=^ 
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Wheel - ing out on a wind - y sky 

THE LOST SONG 



1 plucked a wild flower from the river's brim, 

And drank awhile its faint but fragrant breath. 
Then cast it forth upon the wave a-swim. 

And watched it, as 1 fancied, drift to death. 
''Tis lost," 1 said; but far adow^n the tide 

A tempted maiden saw its dainty hue; 
She snatched it, kneeling at the water-side. 

And vowed : " 1 will be pure, sweet flower, like you. 
And I, I never knew. 

— George Horton 



REST 

If all the skies were sunshine. 

Our faces w^ould be fain 
To feel once more upon them 

The cooling plash of rain. 

If all the world were music, 

Our hearts would often long 
For one sweet strain of silence 

To break the endless song. 

If life were always merry, 

Our souls would seek relief 
And rest from weary laughter 

In the quiet arms of grief. 

— Henry Van Dyke 

I love thee, dear, with love that stays. 

With love that knows no bound ; 

I love thee, dear, with love that prays 

Thy life a peaceful round. 

Nor joy, nor grief, nor deep, nor high, 

Can measure all my love ; 

I love thee, love thee, and deny 

Its peer below, — above ! 



Twenty Life and Song 



WITH THEE 

If I could know that after all 

These heavy bonds have ceased to thrall, 
We, -whom in life the fates divide, 
Should sweetly slumber side by side — 

That one green spray would drop its dew 

Softly alike above us two, 

All would be well; for 1 should be 
At last, dear, loving heart, with thee 1 

How sweet to know this dust of ours. 
Mingling, will feed the self-same flowers — 

The scent of leaves, the song-bird's tone. 

At once across our rest be blown. 
One breadth of sun, one sheet of rain 
Make green the earth above us twain ; 

Ah, sweet and strange, for I should be 

At last, dear, tender heart, with thee. 

But half the earth may intervene 

Thy place of rest and mine between — 

And leagues of land and wastes of waves 

May stretch and toss between our graves. 
Thy bed with summer light be warm. 
While snow drifts heap, in wind and storm. 

My pillow^, w^hose one thorn w^ill be. 

Beloved, that 1 am not with thee. 

But if there be a blissful sphere 
Where homesick souls, divided here. 

And wandering w^ide in useless quest. 

Shall find their longed-for haven of rest. 
If in that higher, happier birth 
We meet the joys w^e missed on earth. 

All will be well, for 1 shall be. 

At last, dear, loving heart, with thee. 

— Elizabeth Akers Allen 



*Love is but a lasting pain and ever goes with grief." 

— Moorish Literature 



ESS^^g^ 



Good - bye. Sum - mer. good - bye, good - bye, 



Music has charms to soothe a savage breast. 
To soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak; 
I've read that things inanimate have moved, 
And, as with living souls, have been inform'd, 
By magic numbers and persuasive sound. 

— Congreve 



Man is his own star; and the soul that can 
Render an honest and a perfect man 
Commands all light, all influence, all fate. 
Nothing to him falls early, or too late, 
Our acts our angels are, or good or ill, 
Our fatal shadows that walk by us still. 

— John Fletcher 



There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, 

There is a rapture on the lonely shore. 

There is society, where none intrudes. 

By the deep Sea, and music in its roar: 

I love not Man the less, but Nature more, 

From these our interviews, in which 1 steal 

From all I may be, or have been before, 

To mingle with the Universe, and feel 

What I can ne'er express, yet cannot all conceal. 

— Byron 



Man's love is of man's life a thing apart, 
*T is woman's whole existence. 

— Byron 



Tlie love of music seems to exist for its own sake. 

— Herbert Spencer 



Twenty-two Life and Song 



Why do those cliffs of shadowy tint appear 
More sweet than all the landscape smiling near? 
*Tis distance lends enchantment to the view. 
And robes the mountain in its azure hue. 

— Campbell 



Like as a plank of driftwood. 
Tossed on the watery main, 
Another plank encountered 
Meets — touches — parts again. 
So tossed — and drifting ever. 
On Hfe's unresting sea 
Men meet and greet and sever. 
Parting eternally. 

— Hindu Peace 



Dark and despairing, my sight I may seal, 
But man cannot cover what God would reveal; 
'Tis the sunset of life gives me mystical lore, 
And coming events cast their shadow^s before. 

— Campbell 



Cease, every joy, to glimmer on my mind. 

But leave — oh ! leave the light of Hope behind ! 

— Campbell 



A little learning is a dangerous thing; 
Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring ; 
There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain. 
And drinking largely sobers us again. 

— Pope 



Our little lives are held in equipoise 
By opposite attractions and desires, 
The struggle of the instinct that enjoys, 
And the far nobler instinct that aspires. 



^^ 



>9—9- 



— F 



Good - bye. Sum - mer, good - bye. 



good 



122: 



bye 



a 



SONNET 

Say over again, and yet once over again, 
That thou dost love me. Though the word repeated 
Should seem a "cuckoo-song," as thou dost treat it, 
Remember, never to the hill or plain, 
Valley and w^ood, without her cuckoo strain 
Comes the fresh spring in all her green completed. 
Beloved, I, amid the darkness greeted 
By a doubtful spirit voice, in that doubt's pain 
Cry: "Speak once more — thou lovest!" Who can fear 
Too many stars, though each in heaven shall roll — 
Too many flowers, though each shall crown the year? 
Say thou dost love me, love me, love me — toll 
The silver iterance! — only minding, dear, 
To love me also in silence, with thy soul. 

— Elizabeth Barrett Browning 



IF!' 



If you w^ere sitting talking to me there. 

There — in that chair; 
If 1 were watching your dear face — your face 

So passing fair; 
Holding your hands in mine, my joy would be 

A perfect thing; 
And my glad heart within my breast would 

Thrill and lilt and sing; 
As some sad bird who thinks her nestlings 

Gone, flutters and cries. 
Then finds them 'neath a hiding place of 

Leaves, and sorrow dies, 
The while her clear song rises to the sky 

In ecstacies! 

— All the Year Round 



Twenty-four Life and Song 



THIS WAS HIS SWORD 

This was his sword — 

It dangled beside him, 

When the hand of his mother 

Caressed his bright hair, and her tears 

Dew^ed his cheek at their parting. 

It was rattled by jostUng compemions. 

When the sw^ift, sw^aying train 

Through the pine w^oods w^ent, roaring and shrieking. 

In its scabbard it touched the broad deck 

Of the steamer that sought green islauid. 

Deep-set in its crystalline waters — 

Fair island — "the smile of the sea." 

And it flashed as he stood on the ridge. 

Where the palms, tall, majestic. 

Rose white, w^ith green fronds, set against a blue sky. 

Yes, it flashed and it circled and cut. 

When the wild cavalcade dashed through smoke. 

And stern valor struck dow^n the oppressor. 

• ' ' Then it lay in the dust 

In a still, nerveless hand. 

This was his sw^ord — 

That lies now so lovingly 

On the casket of ebony. 

Pressing down the totn flag 

Folded over his breast. 

And now^ that same mother's hand. 

Tremblingly, lovingly, , 

In the gloom-darkened room 

Steals along the smooth ebony — 

Steals along the flag — 

Then fondles the sword. 

' ' ' Then God says: "Dear mother. 

By the blood of the brave 

Is humanity cleansed," 

And his work is not lost 

Nor his life blotted out. 

-Walters. Vail 



^J iJV' 



* All the to-morrows shall be as to-day ; 

A MODULATION 

Translucent, trembling, exquisite with life, 
The fair night-blooming cactus flower awakes ; 
A fragrant w^onder of white loveliness 
That crowns its rough and hairy stem, so brief 
A space we hardly capture its delight 
Before it withers and is gone again. 

So, from the somber stem of minor keys, 
Burst forth those few sweet major harmonies, 
A lovely flower of tone that, palpitant. 
Entranced the sense till, all too soon again, 
It shrank within its own strange, dusky stem, 
But left the air still perfumed and the soul 
Illumined still with lambent memory. 

— Amy S. Bridgman 

THE POET 

Let me go where'er I will, 

I hear a sky-born music still ; 

It sounds from all things old, 

It sounds from all things young. 

From all that's fair, from all that's foul 

Peels out a cheerful song. 

It is not only in the rose. 

It is not only in the bird, 

Not only w^here the rainbow glow^s, 

Nor in the song of woman heard, 

But in the darkest, meanest things. 

There alway, aWay something sings. 

*Tis not in the high stars alone, 

Nor in the cups of budding flowers, 

Nor in the redbreast's mellow tone. 

Nor in the bow that smiles in showers, 

But in the mud and scum of things 

There alway, alw^ay something sings. 

— Emerson 



Twenty-slx Life and Song 



THE HEAVY MISTS 

The heavy mists tredl low upon the sea 
And equally the sky and ocean hide. 
As two world-wandering ships close side by side 

A moment loom and part; out o'er the lee 

One leans, and calls, " What, ho ! " Then fitfully 
A gust the voice confuses, and the fcone 
Dies out upon the waters faint and lone, 

And each ship all the w^ide world seems to be. 

So meet we and so part w^e on the land, 

A glimpse, a touch, a cry, and on w^e go 
As lonely as one single star in space. 
Driven by a destiny none understand. 

We cross the track of one 't were life to know. 
Then all is but the memory of a face. 

— M. J. Savage 



Ships that pass in the night, and speak each other in 

passing, 
Only a signal shewn, and a distant voice in the darkness ; 
So, on the ocean of life we pass and speak one another. 
Only a look and a voice, then darkness again and a silence. 

— Longfellow 



A SUPPLICATION 

Let me but hold thy hand. 
And, through the valleys, dark w^ith toil and care 
And disappointment, I would pass with stride 
That faltered not, and I would count as naught 
The doubts and fears that now assail me, fraught 
With whispers of False Hope — twin brother of Despair, 
I'd scale Ambition's peaks unterrified 

Could I but hold thy hand. 



m 



The 



m 



is frayed. The 



is dry ; 



Music exalts each joy, allays each grief, 
Expels disease, softens every pain. 
And hence the wise of ancient days adored 
One god of physics, melody and song. 

— Armstrong 



THE THREE SELVES 

This truth I see: Each soul is armed by Fate, 

With thronging possibilities of good and ill; 
One self is known of love, and one of hate. 

And one unknow^n remains in conscience still. 
His face is fair I love, and yet a spark 

Of hidden lightning shows where clouds may be 
Within the shadow of those eyes so dark. 

May lurk another spirit few can see — 
One that I fear. And yet I know that love 

And kindness rule that life w^ith ready hand, 
Though lightning striking from the clouds above 

May mar the fairest castle man has planned. 
Yet doubt I not what good I know to be. 

Nor value less when heaven sends it me. 

— Sarah Palmer Byrnes 



Oh. think not I could forget you — 

I would not though I could; 
I see you in all about me — 

The trees, the night, the wood; 
The flowers that slumber so gently. 

The sky above the blue — 
Oh, heaven itself is praying — 

Is praying, my darling, for you — 



or you. 



Twenty-eight Life and Song 



LOVE'S WMISPERS 

Though seas divide, and mountains intervene, 
And long, cold wastes of dreary years between 

Two hearts stretched desolate. 
Yet shall the one unto the other call 
Some day, and it shall hear and answer all 

The pleadings of its mate; 
Content to let the mighty hand of love 
Control its wild pulsations — and so prove 

The boundless power of fate. 

And though death takes some night the heart that calls 
And bears it gently to a land where falls 

No cloud of unbelief, 
And though it sings with other hearts sweet songs. 
Yet shall one note creep in that e'er belongs 

Unto the songs of grief. 

And unto only them : Then that strange tone 
Shall wander to the heart that waits alone. 

And comforting relief 
Shall take the place of its unanswered pain. 
In knowledge that true love doth live again. 

-Olla P. Toph 



THE IDLER 

Has he wrought well ? 1 know not. Nay, 1 know 
Things without number that he leaves undone ; 

The things that vex the little people so 
Who, blinded by the sun. 
Walk ever in vast meditation 

Upon the many motes the sunbeams throw^. 

But he lives certain things. He has a w^ay 
Of gleaming wonder. When a little wing 

Beats by, he listens. He can chant the day 
To rhythms of the dusk, and dim things sing 
To him w^hen no one knows their awakening. 

Has he wrought ill ? I know not who shall eay. 

— Everybody's Magazine 



rit. 



7ti-7N Qij m 



The link must break, and the lamp must die, . . . 

DON'T LET THE SONG GO OUT OF 
YOUR LIFE 

Don't let the song go out of your life ; 

Though it chance sometimes to flow 
In a minor strain, it will blend again 

With the major tone, you know. 

What though shadows rise to obscure life's skies. 

And hide for a time the sun; 
They sooner will lift, and reveal the rift 

If you let the melody run. 

Don't let the song go out of your life; 

Though your voice may have lost its trill. 
Though the tremulous note should die in the throat. 

Let it sing in your spirit still. 

There is never a pain that hides not some gain. 

And never a cup of rue 
So bitter to sup but in the cup 

Lurks a measure of sweetness, too. 

Oh, why should we moan that life's Spring-time 
has flown. 

Or sigh for the fair Summer-time ? 
The Autumn hath days filled with paeans of praise. 

And the Winter hath bells that chime. 

Don't let the song go out of your life ; 

Let it ring in the soul awhile here, 
And when you go hence, it shall follow you thence. 

And sing on in another sphere. 

Then do not despond, and say that the fond 

Sw^eet songs of your life have flow^n. 
For if ever you knew a song that was true. 

Its music is still your own. 

— Kate R. Stiles 



Thirty Life and Song 



ABSENT 

Sometimes, between long shadows on the grass, 
The little truant w^aves of sunlight pass. 
My eyes grow dim with tenderness, the while. 
Thinking I see thee smile ! 

And sometimes, in the twilight gloom, apart. 
The tall trees w^hisper, whisper heart to heart, 
From my fond lips the eager answers fall, 
Thinking I hear thee call [ 

— Catherine Young Glen 

THE MANTLE OF MERCY 

All day long at the loom of love 

A beautiful angel sat and w^ove. 

The woof was of silver threads of light. 

The -warp was of gossamer dciinty white. 

Beaded w^ith dew^ from the tender skies 

That lay in the depths of the angel's eyes. 

Alone, in silence, the angel wrrought 
The secret of her holy thought : 
Something was needed down there below. 
In the struggling world of death and w^oe. 
To hide from the sight of earth and heaven 
The stains of sin by heaven forgiven — 

Something to hide the faults of men 

From the vulture's eyes, whose greedy ken 

Hunted them out, by night and day. 

That human souls might be its prey. 

To meet this want the angel w^ove 

That wonderful web in the loom of love. 

And she fashioned a mantle, with sweeping train, 

That nothing of eeirth could ever stain; 

A mantle for Mercy's hands to take 

And backward bear, for love's dear sake. 

And cast, wherever a soul doth lie 

In shame, a sport for the passer-by. 



Good-bye to Hope! Good-bye, good-bye, . . . 

From harmony, from heavenly harmony, this universal 

frame began; 
From harmony to harmony through all the compass of the 

notes it ran, 
The diapason closing full in man. 



The heart that has truly loved never forgets. 

But as truly loves on to the close. 
As the sunflower turns on her god, when he sets. 

The same look which she turn'd when he rose. 

— Thomas Moore 



OH. HAD WE SOME BRIGHT LITTLE ISLE 
OF OUR OWN 

Oh, had we some bright little isle of our own. 
In a blue summer ocean, far off and alone. 
Where a leaf never dies in the still blooming bowers. 
And the bee banquets on through a whole year of flowers; 
"Where the sun loves to pause 

With so fond a delay. 
That the night only draws 
A thin veil o'er the day. 
Where simply to feel that we breathe, that we live. 
Is worth the best joy that life elsewhere can give. 
There, with souls ever ardent and pure as the clime. 
We should love as they loved in the first golden time; 
The glow of the sunshine, the balm of the air, 
Would steal to our hearts and make all summer there. 
With affection as free 

From decline as the bowers. 
And with hope, like the bee. 
Living always on flowers. 
Our life should resemble a long day of light. 
And our death come on, holy and calm as the night. 

— Thomas Moore 



Thirty-two Life and Song 



DESTINY 

Lachesis spins; 

And from her fatal distaflF flows 

A pitchy thread — the warp of w^oes 
That are to be, the woof of sin 

Predestined to enmesh the soul 

Of man. Full thrice accursed those 
Whose luckless lives today begin. 

The strand is strong, the w^eb is wide ; 

Ensnared by crime or lust or pride. 

It drags its victims to the hole 
Where shame-crowned Death forever grins. 

The mist-veiled moon shows pale and hoar. 

The restless river frets its shore; 

A plunge, a shriek, one less, one more — 
Lachesis spins. 

Lachesis spins; 

And now a slender thread of gold 
The distaff yields. *Tis wealth untold 

To those who, all unwitting, wear 
The web of gossamer the Fate 
Now spins. For health and love enfold 

Them, like rich garments, fine and fair ; 
And wisdom, honor, w^it or pow^er 
Entwines them from their natal hour 
With potent meshes intricate. 

One born today forever w^ins. 

The moonbeams flit across the floor. 
The loved ones weep when all is o'er; 
A nation mourns, one less, one more — 

Lachesis spins. 

— Henry B. Culver 



I will not attempt to explain what constitutes a 
beautiful song. It is as easy and as difficult as a beautiful 
poem. " 'Tis but a breath," as Goethe says. 



i 



^m 



Good-bye to Hope! Good-bye, 



Good-bye ! 



If music be the food of love, play on. 
Give me excess of it; that, surfeiting. 
The appetite may sicken, and so die. — 
That strain again — it had a dying fall: 
O, it came o'er my ear like the sweet south. 
That breathes upon a bank of violets, 
Stealing, and giving odour. 

-Twelfth Night 



THE LOVE OF NATURE 

How generous Nature is to those who show 
A sympathy with her ! How every breeze 

Seems a caress 1 How all the shrubs and trees 
Put on their tenderest green, and flowers blow, 
And even birds and insects seem to know 

Your heart, and strive, each in his way to please ! 

The birds build at your door, the honey-bees 
Are sure of finding sweets where'er you go — 
Since every rose will blossom at its best 

For those who have the rose's love within. 
The heart that blesses others will be blest ; 

The lives that look for blossoms, blossoms win; 
The love of birds will build a song-bird's nest 

Upon a bough where w^inter snow^s have been. 

— Mary A. Mason 



Pleasures are like poppies spread, 

You seize the flower, the bloom is shed; 

Or like the snow-fall in the river, 

A moment white, then melts forever; 

Or like the borealis race, 

That flit ere ye can point their place ; 

Or like the rainbow's lovely form. 

Evanishing amidst the storm. 



Thirty.four L>fe and Song 



But little do men perceive what solitude is, and how 
far it extendeth. For a crowd is not company ; and (aces 
are but a gallery of pictures; and talk but a tinkling 
cymbal, where there is no love. 

— Bacon 



WAITING 

Serene 1 fold my hands and wait. 

Nor care for wind nor tide nor sea; 
I strive no more 'gainst time or fate. 
For, lo! my own shall come to ntie. 

I stay my haste, 1 make delays; 

For what avails this eager pace ? 
1 stand amid the eternal ways. 

And what is mine shall know my face. 

Asleep, awake, by night or day. 
The friends 1 seek are seeking me; 

No wind can drive my bark astray, 
Nor change the tide of destiny. 

What matter if I stand alone ? 

I wait with joy the coming years; 
My heart shall reap where it has sown. 

And garner up its fruit of tears. 

The waters know their own, and draw 

The brook that springs in yonder heights ; 

So flows the good with equal law 
Unto the soul of pure delights. 

— John Burroughs 



Tomorrow hath a rare, alluring sound. 
Today is very prose ; and yet the twain 
Are but our vision seen through altered eyes, 
Our dreams inhabit one; our stress and pain 
Surge through the other. Heaven is but today 
Made lovely with tomorrow's face for aye I 

— Aimee M.Wood 



LAST NIGHT 




Last night the night - in - gale woke 



Grand music is the utterance of emotions for which 
Language is too slow, too cold and too confined. 

— G. D. Haughton 



A SERENE WINTER'S NIGHT 

How beautiful this Night! The balmist sigh 

Which vernal zephyrs breathe in evening's ear, 

Were discord to the speaking quietude 

That wraps this moveless scene. Heaven's ebon vault. 

Studded with stars unutterably bright. 

Through which the moon's unclouded grandeur rolls. 

Seems like a canopy which Love had spread 

To curtain her sleeping world. Yon gentle hills. 

Robed in a garment of untrodden snow; 

Yon darksome walls, whence icicles depend 

So stainless that their white and glittering spears 

Tinge not the moon's pure beam ; yon castled steep. 

Whose banner hangeth o'er the time-worn tower 

So idly that wrapt Fancy deemeth it 

A metaphor of Peace, — all form is scene 

Where musing Solitude might love to hft 

Her soul above this sphere of earthliness; 

Where silence undisturbed might watch alone, 

So cold, so bright, so still I 

— Shelley 



THE EPIGRAM 



The epigram is the wasp of wit — 
Of letters the insect Tartar. 

Wee and wicked, it means to hit — 
And the meaner it is, the smarter. 



Thirty-six Life and Song 



LET SOMETHING GOOD BE SAID 

When over the fair name of friend or foe 
The shadow of disgrace shall fall; instead 

Of words of blame, or proof of thus and so. 
Let something good be said. 

Forget not that no fellow-being yet 

May fall so low but love may lift his head ; 

Even the cheek of shame with tears is wet 
If something good be said. 

No generous heart may vainly turn aside 
In ways of sympathy; no soul so dead 

But may awaken strong and glorified 
If something good be said, 

And so I charge ye by the thorny crow^n 

And by the cross on which the Saviour bled, 

And by your ow^n soul's hope of fair renow^n, 
Let something good be said. 

— James Whitcomb Riley 



I LOVE YOU. DEAR 

" I love you, dear." 
There is no phrase so worn and old 
In all the world, no one so sweet 
To lover's lips or maiden's ear 
As this refreun, " I love you, dear." 

" 1 love you, dear." 
There is no change as time wears on ; 
No new words seem to mean so much 
As when they're uttered fondly near. 
In trembling tones, "I love you, dear." 

"I love you, dear." 
No night so dark, no day so long 
But hope brings comfort to the heart. 
If only " some one " standeth near 
In trembling tones, "I love you, dear." 



I j^ I J ;i ^^ 



Last night, when all was still. 

Music does not cover a little excited bit of life, but the 

-whole of life. 

— Edmund Gurney 



A HANDCLASP 

Through the distance between us 1 stretch my hand. 

The deepening shadows are dull and gray; 
Will it meet your own in some fair dreamland 
Where you will clasp it, and understand 
All that 1 longed to say? 

For words are empty and life is vain. 

The heart grows weary when hope declines. 

And what avails our bitter pain 

To know in a sweeping cloud of rain 

That somewhere the sun still shines? 

I will play the bars of a lilting tune. 

Let the sadness fade and the smiles begin 

Of roses clustering in fragrant June; 

But winter withers the bloom too soon, 
And the minor chords creep in. 

Come, let your footsteps to dreamland stray. 
There fate is vanquished and Hfe is fair. 
There the young heart bounds to the coming fray, 
And mocks at warning from heads grown gray. 
And smiles at the brow of care. 

There I will meet you and each shall speak 

Of joys that blossom o'er life's fair slope. 
Of jewels waiting till we shall seek. 
For Faith is mighty though hands are weak, 
And dreamland is bright with hope. 

But visions fade though we strive to hold. 
For dreamland's shore is a shifting sand. 

Is life the thing that our youth foretold ? 

I speak no answer, for words are cold ; 
1 only stretch out my hand. 

— May Spencer Farrand 



Thiity-eigKt Life and Song 



AT SET OF SUN 

If we sit down at set of sun 

And count the things that we have done, 

And counting find 
One self-denying act, one word 
That eased the heart of him who heard; 

One glance most kind. 
That fell like sunshine where it went. 
Then w^e may count that day w^ell spent. 

But if, through all the live-long day, 
We've eased no heart by yea or nay; 

If through it all 
We've done no thing that we can trace, 
That brought the sunshine to a face; 

No act most small. 
That helped some soul, and nothing cost. 
Then count that day as worse than lost. 



SIMILITUDE 

Life, pictured as the earth, before us spreads, 

The trees, deep-rooted thoughts, the soul's ideals; 
While fancy ever like a flower sheds 

A fragrance pure and sweet, which through life steals. 
The sky, resembling our environment. 

With sometimes dark and gloomy clouds above. 
Has, too, the sun, w^hose faithful beams are sent 

Through clouds to light the day, like steadfast love. 

-— Blanche Grier Conrad 



Were it not for sound and song. 

Life w^ould lose its pleasure ; 
We could not endure it long. 

Such a load of treasure. 
Say, what is it soothes the soul, 

And the heart rejoices > 
'Tis the burst of joyous song, 

Blending happy voices. 

— From the German 



I'^^J' I h ^ h 



^ 



sang in the 



gold - en moon - light. 



I State it thus : 
There is no truer truth obtainable 
By man than comes of music. 

— BroMrning 



IN DOUBT 

When lashes drooping lie 

On cheeks of softest rose, 
Ah, how demure and sly 

The wonted aspect grows. 
When lashes drooping lie! 

And yet, until he try. 
No man of surety knows 

When lashes drooping — lie! 

— Anne Virginia Culbertson 



FOR JUNE 

Prince or peasant or priest — what matter 

If the heart to its highest dream be true ? 

Standing apart from the world's mad clatter 
We catch the song from the upper blue. 

Song of robin and bursting flower, 

Rapture of morning in eastern sky — 

To understand means an inner power: 
Would we exchange it, you and I? 

Social place and the gold to get it — 
Who would envy the richest king? 

The life has nothing so small to fret it 

That understands what the bluebirds sing. 

The hand that strives has a new precision; 

We must be glad then, you and I, 
For the broader view and the clearer vision. 

Acres of June and a sunlit sky. 

—Mildred Grant Phillips 



Forty Lif® 2"*^ Song 



HEARTS* SEASONS 

When the Earth was flushed and the trees were young 
And the bluebirds called from an April sky, 
Beyond where the moon's slim cradle swung 

Life's long, long vistas before us hung 

Half-veiled in tears, though we knew not why ; 

For hearts were yearning — but on the tongue 
The slow words faltered, and lips were shy. 

When the Earth was green and the trees were strong 
And the river sang to the warm, w^hite sun. 

The hours were blithe and the days were long. 

For life w^as working, and work w^as song — 
No w^ailing minor of things undone 

And no black discord of hopes gone wrong; 
Life's sands were many, and slow to run. 

When the Earth is bleak and the trees are pale 
And the east w^ind cries through the falling rain. 

Draw close, dear heart, from the rising gale; 

We'll measure bravely our meager tale 
Of w^ide, poor stubble and scanty grain. 

But, dear, we have tried ; if the harvest fail 
The Lord of the Harvest will count our pain. 

When the trees are gray and the Earth is white 
And the north wind sings in the chimney stone. 

Then, hand in hand, we will wait the night; 

With quiet hearts, we will say good-night. 
Dear heart, was not all the year our own ? 

There is no darkness Love cannot blight — 
We'll face, together, the great Unknown! 

— Charles Buxton Going 



LIFE'S SLATE 

Reason may dictate, judgment write. 
Wisdom approve what's writ ; 

Love, with his dart, puts all to flight. 
Laughs, and erases it. 

— Albert E. Peters 



i 



^^ 



From 



out .... 



the 



wood - land hill. 



Music, by preserving a perfect equilibrium and har- 
mony in all the organs, and filling the heart with tender 
sentiments, makes those who are sensitive to it susceptible 
of a happiness amounting almost to a sweet delirium. 

— H. Chomet 



LEAF AND LOVE 

"Whirl, oh, whirl on the breath of the wind. 

Leaves that are red and gold; 

The airs of the Autumn are cruel and cold^ 

Tearing the leaves from the tree! 
Life of my heart, as the wind unkind. 

Why art thou gone from me? 

Fade and be lost, ye dreams of my breast. 

Dreams that were dear of old — 

As bright as the leaves, as their red and gold! 

Go, and be lost like the leaves! 
Full is my heart w^ith the year's unrest. 

Wild as the wind that grieves. 

Bare is my life as the naked bough. 

Bent by the w^ailing blast! 

Oh, ghosts that gleam from the passionate past. 

Pleading for joy that is sped. 
Why must ye linger? Ye mock me now. 

Now that her love is dead ! 

— Edward A. U. Valentine 



In love, if love be love, if love be ours. 
Faith and unfaith can ne'er be equal pow^ers, 

Unfaith in aught is want of faith in all. 
It is the little rift within the lute 
That by and by will make the music mute. 

And, ever widening, slowly silence all. 



Forty-two Life and Song 



LITTLE KINDNESS 



If you were toiling up a weary hill, 

Bearing a load beyond your strength to bear, 
Strzuning each nerve untiringly, and still 

Stumbling and losing foothold here and there. 
And each one passing by would do so much 

As give one upw^ard lift and go their way 
Would not the slight reiterated touch 

Of help and kindness lighten all the day? 

If you were breasting a keen wind, which tossed 

And buffeted and chilled you as you strove. 
Till, baffled and bewildered quite, you lost 

The power to see the way and aim and move, 
And one, if only for a moment's space. 

Gave you a shelter from the bitter blast. 
Would you not find it easier to face 

The storm again w^hen the brief rest w^as past ? 

There is no little and there is no much; 

We weigh and measure and define in vain. 
A look, a word, a light, responsive touch 

Can be the ministers of joy to pain. 
A man can die of hunger w^alled in gold, 

A crumb may quicken hope to stronger breath. 
And every day we give or we withhold 

Some little thing w^hich tells for life or death. 

— Coolidge 



DOUBT 

Love hath wings and flies from far. 
Nor bolts nor prisons may it bar. 
One door, one only, shuts it out, 
The dark and shadowed one of doubt. 

— Lisa A. Fletcher 



I o - pen'd my win - dow so gent - ly. 

Music commonly goes hand in hand with kindness. 

— Henry T. Finch 



IRENE'S INFATUATION 

Irene became a Wagnerite 

At quite a recent day; 
And when her fads begin their flight 

She follows all the w^ay; 
Just now she thinks the earth was made 

That "Parsifal" might be displayed. 

Irene reads volumes by the score. 

That bear upon this theme; 
She skims through mageizines galore 

For Parsifallian cream; 
The papers, too, though not for news. 

But pro and Con-ried interviews. 

Irene hears lectures, every kind — 
With choir-boys, w^ith scenes. 

With moving pictures, or combined 
With musical machines: 

Consuming, hastily, the cult; 

Will mind-dyspepsia not result? 

Irene is learning, note by note. 
That w^eird and wondrous score. 

Sub rosa-Iy, her family vote 
The opera is a bore; 

And if announced for five more times. 
They'll take a trip to distant climes. 

Irene's adorers look askance. 
And more remote they stand; 

Ejtcept one youth, w^ho sees his chance 
To w^in the lady's hand ; 

She'll not refuse (he is adroit ! ) 
A w^edding journey to Bayreuth. 

— Anna Matheweon 



Forty-four Life and Song 



TO ONE ABSENT 

An echo of the sea yet haunts the shell. 

Though far it be from cliff, or beach, or wave. 
It still repeats the message ocean gave. 

Subdued and softened by love's mystic spell 
To tender cadences by night and day, 

Remote from scenes -where it vv^as w^ont to dwell. 
So I w^ould ask, though thou art far away. 
As pearly shell that sings the distant sea. 

To be remembered, and would deem it well 
If in thy absence there abides with thee 
A haunting echo in thy heart of me. 

-Henry C. Wood 



THOUGHT 

I think, and my thoughts are wafted 

Far out o'er life's restless sea; 
I think, and my thoughts have attracted 

My heart's desire to me. 
I think, and my thoughts are freighted 

With anxious care and fear. 
And 1 send them out thus weighted 

To fall on friends most dear. 
Some dire misfortunes may befall 

My loved ones; sickness, pain and death 
Vibrations start beyond recall, 

And true to their mission, ruin health. 
I think, and my thoughts have started 

On a journey that hath no end ; 
From me forever they're parted. 

And 1 know not whither they trend. 
1 think — if my thoughts are gloomy 

They create rebellion and strife. 
1 think — if my thoughts are sunny 

They awaken in all new life. 

— Edith Griffin 



1 look'd on the dream - ingr d« 



Music is undoubtedly the purest of all arts; all the 
others are liable to the intrusion of some prosaic elements. 
Music alone presents always the characteristics of pure 
poetry. 

— William Bellars 



IN DEGREE 

Sweet are the songs that are sung. 
But the unsung songs are sweeter. 

For the depth of the poet's soul 
Outstretches the bounds of meter. 

Warm are the words of love. 

But warmer the heart of the wooer, 

Friendship may hold for truth. 
But the soul of love is truer. 

— Maude Meredith 



Season and scene come back again. 
And outward things unchanged remain ; 
The past we cannot reinstate. 
Ourselves we cannot recreate. 
Nor set ourselves to the same key 
Of the remembered harmony. 

— Longfellow 

THE END 

The play is done — the curtain falls — 
Hero and villain trade their parts ; 

The rich scenes change to smoky walls; 
The lovers e'en forget their hearts. 

And so it is with life — a play 

Made tragedy or farce at will; 
Who knows but as the mourners pray 

The dead find changes greater still? 

— Winthrop Church 



Forty-six Life and Song 



THIS IS TO LOVE 

At last I've found a kindred one 
Who understands my every mood, 
My soul, my open heart are his. 
My every prayer to him I give. 
He loves me for my deeds undone, 
My inner self, my hidden good. 

This is to love to live! 
My better nature swiftly ran, 
To lift my soul up high to him. 
An angel 1 became — O God! 
He is not true ! I wrildly grieve — 
' I will, I will unlove this man ! " 
'Too late," cries quick conviction grim; 

"This is to love — to live!" 

— Jeannette Robinson Murphy 



SONG OF THE WINDS 

The winds — they come like the hounds of the night. 

And they will not let me be; 
Whirling the leaves in their wayward flight. 

Sweeping the hill and lea. 
What of their song when the branches sway. 
Ere the night shades lift to the dusk of day ? 
A ship is lost and a heart in vain 
Waits and hopes at the window pane« 

There by a cold, gray sea. 

The winds — those trailing dogs of the night. 

Hark, hark to their whispering ! 
They moan of a soul that has taken flight, 

And never a hope they bring. 
The lights of the night gleam cold, so cold, 
Over the hills and the upland wold — 
And yonder a night bird, lonely grieves 
For you out there 'neath the sod and leaves — 

And thus do the night winds sing ! 

— Will F. Griffin 



4^j ie -J pi-Pri^p Ji^rij; 



And oh ! the bird, my darling, was sing 



I think that I can answer (or it that if a man loves music 
he generally loves charity. I have found very few men who 
love gardening and were drunken — very few men who 
love song and were churlish. 

— George Dawson. 



I find eeirth not gray but rosy. 

Heaven not grim but fair of hue. 
Do I stoop ? 1 pluck a posy. 

Do 1 stand and stare? All's blue. 

— Robert Browning 



LIFE'S MIRROR 

There are loyal hearts, there are spirits brave. 
There are souls that are pure and true; 

Then give to the world the best you have. 
And the best will come back to you. 

Give love, and love to your life will flow^, 

A strength in your utmost need; 
Have faith, and a score of hearts will show 

Their faith in your w^ord and deed. 

Give truth, and your gift will be paid in kind. 

And honor will honor meet; 
And a smile that is sweet w^ill surely find 

A smile that is just as sweet. 

For life is the mirror of king and slave, 

'Tis just what we are and do ; 
Then give to the world the best you have. 

And the best will come back to you. 

— Madeline S. Bridges 



Forty-ei«ht Life and Song 



THE ClXrS SOLITUDE 

Not to some bleak and long-forgotten wilderness 
My feet would turn, had 1 desire to be alone; 

Not of the hills would I seek respite from distress. 

Nor let the silent desert hear my sorrow and my moan. 

Nay, here w^here chaos reigns, where din and noise are rife, 

The soul can find its solitude, its surcease from the strife. 

The myriad throngs that seem to ceaseless come and go, 
And, moving on, forget that other men have life — 

Forget the simple hand-clasps and forget that they should 
know^ 
E-ach other in the battle of Pain and ruthless Strife — 

Here where the tide of life rolls on with an incessant moan. 

Here on the city's throbbing breast 1 feel the most alone. 

— Charles H. Towne 



BEAUTIFUL LOVE 

It is something sweet, when the world goes ill. 
To know you are faithful and love me still; 
To feel, when the sunshine has left the skies. 
That the light is shining in your dear eyes — 
Beautiful eyes; more dear to me 
Than all the wealth of the world could be. 

It is something, dearest, to feel you near 

When life, with its sorrows, seems hard to bear; 

To feel, w^hen I falter, the clasp divine 

Of your tender and trusting hand in mine — 

Beautiful hand; more dear to me 

Than the tenderest things of earth could be. 

Sometimes, dearest, the world goes wrong. 
For God gives grief w^ith His gift of song ; 
And poverty, too ; but your love is more 
To me than riches and golden store — 
Beautiful love; until death shall part 
It is mine — as you are — my own sweetheart. 



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Sing - ing of 



Music is the wondrous perfection, the highest height of 

that expression, a reach so far above the daily level that 

only by transcending earthly capacity could we interpret 

its burden. 

— Chas. G. Whiting 



1 shot an arrow into the air. 
It fell to earth, I knew^ not where ; 
For, so swiftly it flew, the sight 
Could not follow it in its flight. 

I breathed a song into the air, 
It fell to earth, 1 knew not where ; 
For who has sight so keen and strong. 
That it can follow the flight of song ? 

Long, long afterward, in an oak 
I found the arrow, still unbroke ; 
And the song, from beginning to end, 
I found again in the heart of a friend. 

— Longfellow 



THE DAWN OF LOVE 

I had been sleeping — dreaming : I awoke ! 

E'en as the sun's gay heralds put to Right 

With golden spears the misty ghosts of night, 
And from the shrouding gloom, with every stroke 
Of magic wands, a thousand charms evoke. 

For me a growing splendor seemed to light 

To view^ a world in unguessed beauty dight: 
It seemed a new and glorious morn had broke ; 
The vale appeared a rose embow^er'd shrine. 

Each flow^er, a swaying censer. To my knee 
I sank and w^orshiped, as before mine eyne 

A veil was swept away and I could see 
A newer truth in nature — the Divine — 

I was in love! In love, deeir heart, with thee. 

— Judson N. Smith 



Fifty Life and Song 



THE RAINY DAY 

The day is cold, and dark, and dreary; 
It rains, and the wind is never weary ; 
The vine still clings to the mouldering wall. 
But at every gust the dead leaves fall, 
And the day is dark and dreary. 

My life is cold, and dark, and dreary ; 
It rains, and the wind is never w^eary; 
My thoughts still cling to the mouldering Past, 
But the hopes of youth fall thick in the blast, 
And the days are dark and dreary. 

Be still, sad heart! and cease repining; 
Behind the clouds is the sun still shining; 
Thy fate is the common fate of all. 
Into each life some rain must fall. 

Some days must be dark and dreary. 

— Longfellow 



CAUTION 

"The boneless tongue, so small and weak. 
Can crush and kill," declared the Greek. 

" The tongue destroys a greater horde," 
The Turk asserts, " than does the sword." 

The Persian Proverb wisely saith : 
"A lengthy tongue an early death." 

Or sometimes takes this form instead : 
" Don't let your tongue cut off your head." 

" The tongue can speak a w^ord whose speed," 
Says the Chinese, " outstrips the steed." 

While Arab sages this impart : 
" The tongue's great storehouse is the heart." 

From Hebrew wit the maxim sprung : 
" Though feet should slip, ne'er let the tongue. 

The sacred wrriter crowns the w^hole: 
" Who keeps his tongue doth keep his soul." 



dolce. 




ime - tree. 



SONG 

How many times do I love thee, dear? 

Tell me how many thoughts there be 
In the atmosphere 
Of a new fall'n year, 
Whose white and sable hours appear 

The latest flake of eternity — 
So many times do I love thee, dear. 

How many times do I love, again ? 

Tell me how many beads there are 
In a silver chain 
Of evening rain 
Unravelled from the tumbling main 

And threading the eye of a yellow star — 
So many times do I love again. 

— Thomas Lovell Beddoes 



UNTIL THE EVENING 



Tired with the daily toil for daily bread. 
The spirit slaving for the body's needs, 
The brain and nerve are dulled, and the heart bleeds 

And breaks with grief of brooding thought unsaid: 

Were we but born to labor and be fed? 
To spend our souls in lowly, trivial deeds, 
Mere sordid coin the crown of what succeeds? 
Ah ! yet press on, though with a fainting tread — 

Till Evening ends our work and stills our cries : 
Then we may find our lowness in our height. 
Our crown, the tasks we wrought with sobbing breath ; 

As common things a sunset glorifies. 

This life, at last, may robe itself in light 
And stand transfigured at the touch of death. 

—A. St. J. Adcock 



Fifty-two Life and Song 



HIDDEN MUSIC 

'A blotted score," I said, and tossed it by. 
But he, with reverent hand and meaning smile. 
Lifted its pages to the instrument, 
And o'er the ivory keys his fingers drew. 
Ah, what a strain ! My listening soul threw oS 
The heavy burden of her wild desires, 
And memory hushed her sad, importunate song. 
In the swift-flowing music's tide 1 flung 
My baffled hopes and my ambitions vain. 
As a child throws aside its withered flowers; 
And sudden calm upon my spirit fell — 
I bowed my head and dreamed of death and heaven. 

O life of mine! Albeit thy weary years 
Perplex me with their seeming emptiness; 
Though good and ill, sharp joy and sharper grief. 
Success and failure, discord, harmony. 
Stand side by side in contradiction strange, — 
A purer sight than mine perchance discerns 
Some heavenly meaning in thy hopeless maze. 
And, at the last, the Master's tender touch 
May draw from thee a symphony divine. 

— Eliza Calvert Hall 



HEART'S MUSIC 

The song-sparrow's exquisite warble 
Is born in the heart of the rose, 

Of the wild-rose, shut in its calyx, 
Afraid of belated snows. 

The trees have the winds to sing for them; 

The rock and the hill have the streams; 
And the mountains the thunderous torrents 

That waken old Earth from her dreams. 

He will give us an equal w^elcome, 
Whatever the tribute we bring; 

For to Him who can read the heart's music 
To blossom with love is to sing. 

— Lucy Larcom 



wind 



float 



thro' 



A QUATRAIN 

The sudden flash of a beloved face 

Into a moment, and that moment near — 
Then past; and, in the falling of a tear, 

A young winged, golden sorrow lives in place. 

Anna Robeson Brovri* 



CONSTANCY IN ABSENCE 

My darling, my darling, my darling. 

Do you know how I want you tonight > 
The wind passes, moaning and snarling, 

Like some evil ghost in its flight. 
On the wet street your lamp's gleam shines redly: 

You are sitting alone— did you start 
As I spoke ? Did you guess at the deadly 

Chill pain in my heart ? 

Out here the dull rain is falling. 

Just once — just a moment — I wait. 
Did you hear the sad voice that was calling 

Your name, as 1 paused at the gate ? 
It was just a mere breath, ah, 1 know, dear, 

Not even Love's ears could have heard ; 
But oh ! I was hungering so, dear. 

For one little word. 

Do you think I am ever without you > 

Ever lose for an instant your face 
Or the spell that breathes always about you. 

Of your subtle, ineffable grace ? 
Why, even tonight, put away, dear. 

From the light of your eyes though I stand 
I feel, as 1 linger and pray, dear. 

The touch of your hand. 



Fifty-four Life and Song 



TRUE LOVE 

"Dear one," she said, "the twilight wanes, 
The day will soon be o'er, its toils and pains 
Forgot. Come closer, love, and lay thy hand in mine. 
See how^ eve's glories on the hill-tops shine. 
Thus shines my life, let thus my memory 
Linger w^hen 1 am gone upon thy sky. 
I go, but love remains, and in thy heart 
There lives my nobler and diviner part." 

He bowed his head upon his hands and wept, 
And then the angel came and bore aw^ay the light. 

'Twas night — she slept. 

The days went by, the pansies decked the ground 
Where lay her mortal part in rest profound. 
The summer clothed the ways they used to tread. 
He longed for living love — and she was dead. 
Longing to yearning grew^, and then desire 
Kindled the embers of the burned-out fire. 
Another walked with him life's golden ways. 
Another made the sunshine of his days; 
And she w^ho strong in faith of constancy had died. 
Looking from calm heights of eternity. 
Smiled — and was satisfied. 

— Lou V. Chapin 



When night's mysterious silence shrouds the plain. 
From hidden cells life's ghosts step forth again ; 
Ghosts of mistakes or sins both old and new. 
Pass the mind's eye in panoramic view. 
Happy are they that view, yet feel await 
For them a welcome at the " pearly gate," 
With not one poisoning doubt that whispering tells 
Of warmer welcome waiting somewhere else. 

—Hubert Childe 



Make life a ministry of love, and it will always be worth 

living. 

— Robert Browning 



And oh! the night, my darling, is sigh - ing. 

Music is a life and a world in itself. 

— M. Betham Edwards 



THE WORDS I DID NOT SAY 

Many a word my tongue has uttered 

Has brought me sorrow at eventide, 
And I have grieved with a grieving bitter 

Over speech of anger and scorn and pride. 
But never a word in my heart remembered 

As I sit with myself at the close of day 
Has pierced with repentance more unavailing 

Than have the words 1 did not say. 

The word of cheer that 1 might have whispered 

To a heart that was breaking with weight of woe. 
The word of hope that I might have given 

To one w^hose courage w^as ebbing low, 
The word of warning 1 should have spoken 

In the ear of one who walked astray — 
Oh, how they come with sad rebuking 

Those helpful words that 1 did not say. 

So many and sweet; if I had but said them 

How glad my heart then would have been ; 
What a dew of blessing would fall upon it 

As the day's remembrances gather in ; 
But I said them not and the chance forever 

Is gone with the moments of yesterday. 
And I sit alone with a spirit burdened 

By all the words that I did not say. 

The morrow will come with its new beginning. 

Glad and grand, through the morning's gates — 
Shall I not then with this thought beside me 

Go bravely forth to the work that waits ? 
Giving a message of cheer and kindness 

To all I meet on the world's highway. 
So that I never will grieve at twilight 

Over the words that I did not say. 



Fifty-six Li^e and Song 



A PICTURE 

A day in June; a scholar at his books. 

Whose name the world has echoed far and wide ; 
A tinge of sadness in a face that looks 

As though unsatisfied. 

A day in June ; a fair and girlish face, 
Fresh as the roses which she sits among. 

Bending, half listless, o'er a bit of lace, 
With all life's song unsung. 

A day in June, rich with its wealth of bloom, 
So full of God one scarce need look above ; 

Two sit together in the scholar's room. 
And life is only love. 

Her cheerful voice is music to his ear; 

Touch more than magic has her gentle hand ; 
Her sunny, restful presence brings Heaven near ; 

Her love makes earth so grand. 

A day in June; the roses w^ithered lie; 

A painful stillness o'er the room has grown ; 
There is no charm in earth, or air, or sky ; 

The scholar sits alone. 

— Mrs. Seirah Knowles Bolton 



Since we parted yester-eve 

I do love thee, love, believe, 

Tw^elve times dearer, twelve hours longer. 

One dream deeper, one night stronger. 

One sun surer— this much more 

Than I loved thee, love, before. 



Methought that when 1 met you, dearest heart, 
I'd tell thee all that sw^ells within my breast; 
But now already 'tis the hour to part. 
And oh, how much still lingers unexpressed. 

— Japan 



Sig:h - ing for you, for you. 



JUNE 

And what is so rare as a day in June ? 

Then, if ever, come perfect days; 
Then heaven tries earth if it be in tune, 

And over it softly her warm ear lays; 
Whether we look, or whether we listen, 

We hear life murmur, or see it glisten; 
Every clod feels a stir of might ; 

An instinct within it that reaches and towers. 
And, groping blindly above it for light, 

CHmbs to a soul in grass and flowers ; 
The flush of life may well be seen 

Thrilling back over hills and valleys; 
The cowslip startles in meadows green, 

The buttercup catches the sun in its chalice, 
And there's never a leaf nor a blade too mean 

To be some happy creature's palace; 
The little bird sits at his door in the sun, 

Atilt like a blossom among the leaves. 
And lets his illumined being o'er run 

With the deluge of summer it receives; 
His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings. 
And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings ; 
He sings to the wide w^orld, and she to her nest — 
In the nice ear of Nature which song is the best? 

— ^James Russell Lowell 



By every path where the children play. 
By every road, where the beggars stray. 
By the church's door and the market-stall, 
Let not one sun go down and say, 
'She hath not planted a flow^er today." 



Fifty-eight Life and Song 



A hermit, I, within my own heart sealed. 

Shut out the splendor of the noon sun's light. 

A pessimist, I deemed the world a blight 
And life a curse. Pleasures to me appealed 
My lone cell to forsake ; I would not yield. 

But in my living death embraced the night 

Of loveless being, shutting from my sight 
The heav'n of love to other eyes revealed. 
But through a crevice stole a golden ray; 

I strove to keep it out; it touched mine eyes. 
And, blinded, I the curtain tore away. 

When lo ! a radiant flood from love's sweet skies 
Burst on my life, turned darkness into day. 

And changed my cell into a paradise I 

— Geo. H. Conrard 



We plant sweet flowers above the spot 

Where rest our unforgotten dead. 
And while the roses bud and bloom 

We beautify their lonely bed. 
We rear the the snowy marble shaft 

That every passer-by may learn 
How sacred memory keeps her trust 

In votive gift and storied urn. 
But, oh! the hearts that ache and break 

Through all the long bright summer days 
For some sweet word of tenderness. 

Some generous and outspoken praise; 
And, oh, the bitter tears that fall 

O'er life's mistakes and cruel fate. 
That all things which the heart most crave* 

Of love and glory, come too late. 
Then take the rose that blooms today 

And lay it in some loving hand, 
And wait not till the ear grows dull 

To tell the sweet thought that you planned. 
One kiss on w^arm and loving lips 

Is worth a thousand funeral flowers. 
And one glad day of tender love 

Outweighs an age of mourning hours. 

— D. M. Jordan 



ND THE NIGHT SHALL BE 

FILLED WITH MUSIC 
AND THE CARES. THAT 

INFEST THE DAY. 
SHALL FOLD THEIR TENTS, 
LIKE THE ARABS. 
AND AS SILENTLY STEAL AWAY. 




— Longfellow 



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